5:13 p.m.: "Matt will be on my mind most of the time," Snyder said of tomorrow, which is the fifth anniversary of his son's death.

5:11 p.m.: Craig Trebilcock: The justices sidestepped one of the core issues in the case: Westboro using the Internet to target Snyder's family.

5:10 p.m.: Sean Summers: "I think we did everything we could. ... The reality is, the opinion today took away the precedential lines of public versus private figures."

5:09 p.m.: "Matt probably wouldn't like the decision because he knows it affects all of his brothers and sisters in the military," Snyder said. "I know Matt was with me the whole way through this."

5:07 p.m.: "It's been a long five years, and I'm ready to just put this behind me," Snyder said. "There's still a war going on."

5:06 p.m.: "Right now, with this opinion, anything goes," Snyder said of other families having to have their children's funerals picketed.

He said the Supreme Court justices don't have to deal with Westboro members picketing their families' funerals or celebrations.

5:05 p.m.: Albert Snyder thanks many people for helping him through the last five years since his son died.

"Hey, I fought the good fight," he said.

He said he was very surprised by the ruling. He said he learned today that "eight justices don't have the sense that God gave a goat."

5:04 p.m.: Trebilcock asks people to remember amidst all the "legal wrangling" today that Matthew Snyder died for his country.

He calls the decision "disappointing" and addresses military members, thanking them and their families.

5:03 p.m.: Attorney Craig Trebilcock said his Westboro has "savaged" military families across the country.

Albert Snyder, the father of fallen Marine Matthew Snyder, and his attorney, Sean Summers, are holding a news conference at 5 p.m. today to talk about the Supreme Court's ruling in Snyder v. Phelps.

Snyder, of Spring Garden Township, had sued Westboro Baptist Church, which picketed his son's funeral in March 2006. Today, the Supreme Court ruled that Westboro's protest and its inflammatory signs were free speech and were therefore protected under the First Amendment.

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